by Samuel Scott shows the 1708 sinking of the Spanish galleon San José'' •
Adler von Lübeck, the largest ship of its day when launched in 1566. •
Dainty, ship with which Sir
Richard Hawkins sought to emulate the
circumnavigation voyage of his cousin
Francis Drake. She was captured by the Spanish in the
action of Atacames Bay in 1594 and served in the Spanish Navy in the South American Pacific for several years. •
Revenge, a galleon built in 1577, the flagship of Sir Francis Drake in the Battle of the Spanish Armada in 1588, was captured by a Spanish fleet off Flores in the Azores in 1591 and sank while being sailed back to Spain. •
Triumph, the largest Elizabethan galleon; flagship of Sir
Martin Frobisher in the Battle of the Spanish Armada. •
Galeon Andalucia, a replica galleon built in Spain in 2014. •
Gouden Leeuw, Dutch ship inline of the
Third Anglo-Dutch War •
Golden Hind, the ship in which Sir
Francis Drake circumnavigated the globe 1577–1580. • "La Galga", the
Assateague Spanish galleon that was shipwrecked in 1794; according to legend, the ancestors of the now famous
Chincoteague ponies swam ashore from its hold. •
Nuestra Señora de la Concepción, a Spanish galleon, known to her crew as
Cacafuego for her strong cannon. She was captured by Sir Francis Drake in 1578 and all her treasures were brought to England. She was holding treasures mined in one year by the Spanish in the Americas. •
Padre Eterno, a Portuguese galleon launched in 1663. She was considered to be the biggest ship of her time, carrying 144 pieces of artillery with a displacement up to 2,000 tons. •
San Juan Bautista (originally called Date Maru, 伊達丸 in Japanese). She crossed the
Pacific Ocean from
Japan to
New Spain in 1614. She was of the Spanish galleon type, known in
Japan as Nanban-Sen (南蛮船). •
San Salvador, flagship vessel in
Juan Rodríguez Cabrillo's 1542 exploration of present-day California in the United States. •
Santa Luzia, a Portuguese galleon known for defeating a Dutch
squadron single-handedly twice in 1650. •
Santa Teresa, a Portuguese galleon, the flagship of Admiral
Lope de Hoces at the
Battle of the Downs, in 1639. •
São João Baptista, nicknamed
Botafogo, the most powerful warship in the world at the time when launched (1534) by the Portuguese; became famous during the
Conquest of Tunis (1535), where it was commanded by
Luís of Portugal, Duke of Beja. •
São Martinho, a Portuguese galleon, the flagship of
Duke of Medina Sidonia, commander-in-chief of the Spanish Armada. •
Vasa, the only original galleon to be preserved. She sank in 1628 and was raised in 1961 for preservation as a
museum ship. •
Ark Raleigh was designed and built by Sir
Walter Raleigh. She was later chosen by Lord Howard, admiral of the fleet to be the flagship of the English fleet in the fight against the
Spanish Armada in 1588 and was summarily renamed
Ark Royal. •
San Pelayo, the large 906-ton galleon, which served as the flagship of
Pedro Menéndez de Avilés during his expedition to establish
St. Augustine, Florida in 1565. The vessel was so large it could not enter St. Augustine's harbor, so Menendez ordered it offloaded and sent it back to Hispaniola. At a later date her crew mutinied and sailed to Europe where the ship wrecked off the coast of Denmark. • The
Manila galleons, Spanish trading ships that sailed once or twice per year across the
Pacific Ocean between
Manila in the
Philippines and
Acapulco in
New Spain (now
Mexico); (1565–1815). in
Quebec City in 2016. ==Notes==